Recovery? Not in the cards

Month after month of discouraging data from around the country makes it clear that any recovery in the casino industry is a long way off, perhaps years. Heck, just getting back to 2007 levels of prosperity doesn’t take into account the expansion that occurred in the intervening years. (And if you think Cosmopolitan is going to lift all boats, I’ll have whatever you’re drinking.)

Month after month, two disparate trends mark Las Vegas tourism and gambling data. More people are coming back but they’re spending quite a bit less. The CEOs of MGM Resorts International and Las Vegas Sands tell us that convention traffic on the way back up, with recovery projected for 2011. Since they’ve got access to data we don’t, let’s take them at their word. The bread-and-butter gambler, however, is turning into the nickel-and-dime gambler, reconfiguring Las Vegas into a market desperately dependent on high-end play.

Third-quarter trends in room revenue are flattening for MGM and Harrah’s Entertainment are flattening, after a protracted swoon. However, Wynn Resorts and Sands have been the only major Strip operators on the upswing. It cannot be mere coincidence that each has only two hotels to fill. The strategy of trying to monopolize as much of the Strip as possible has not served either MGM or Harrah’s well during the Great Recession. The “bundling” of the Strip was, and remains, a terrible idea, holding the market hostage to the vicissitudes of two companies.

In what would make a good Sharron Angle talking point (if she knew how to use it), the Las Vegas Sun points out the Aria has fiercely diluted the Strip gambling market, down 14% when Aria is subtracted from the mix. Also, that mainstay of the Strip, the fanny-packing Baby Boomer is tapped out. When your home value has shriveled and your 401(k) is in the crapper, gambling just isn’t the pleasant pastime it used to be. “During the boom years, many Americans used their homes like ATMs, withdrawing equity to spend on luxury goods and trips. Much of this ready cash has dried up in the recession, and declining home prices have made consumers feel less financially secure and more tight with their cash,” writes Liz Benston.

That’s bad news for companies like Harrah’s, which bank on packing in the retirees. Now that they’re sitting their few remaining nest eggs, the industry must put its hopes on the VIP market as well as all those mysteriously affluent twentysomethings who think naught of dropping several thou in an afternoon at Rehab. You’d expect that well would have dried up too, by now, but luckily for the casinos, those youngsters continue to party hearty.

Cold feet in Massachusetts. Spooked by casino opponents and fears of dire social disintegration, the Boston Globe has gone into full retreat on the issue, uttering a craven call to legislators to kill the debate until next year. (At which point the Globe will probably say the same thing all over again.) The editorial’s generally squeamish tone indicates that the Globe was never down with this whole casino thing to begin with. (Smoking? Shocking! Free drinks? Horrors!)

True, the sausage-making on Beacon Hill has been particularly grisly and the Globe makes some good points about the juicing-in of certain favorite-son racinos. But vast amounts of revenue have already been lost by punting this debate from the ’09 Lege into this year. Casino licenses in Massachusetts will be even less valuable in 2011 — especially if Bay State tribes make a federal end-run and get a jump on the private sector. Gov. Deval Patrick and his unruly lawmakers literally can’t afford further delay.

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